August 12, 1943 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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{Ego Eight
Potlatch Youth
Home On Leave
By Elizabeth Hus man
Potlatch, August 1 —On Fri-
day, July 30th, Pvt. Richard
Pearce arrived at the home of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. Pearce
to spend six days of his furlough.
Richard now is stationed on the
desert in Arizona. On Wednesday
the day Richard left for his camp,
Machinist Mate Jack Pearce, who
had been at sea, arrived at home.
Jack and his brother, with their
parents, spent the clay in Seat-
tle. Mr. and Mrs. Pearce and
Jack spent Saturday in Seattle.
Saturday evening Jack left for
San Francisco. ‘
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Lind and
daughter Agnes spent Sunday in
Potlatch visiting friends.
On Friday Mr. and Mrs. Axel
Carlson and son Jerry of Tacoma
and son Pvt. Glenn Carlson of
Camp Bowie, Texas, were guests
at the F. S. Morrison home.
Antone Ness of Tacoma, was]
a guest at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Rodgeberg last week.
Mr. and Mrs. T. Jacobson and
daughter Irene of Du Pont, spent
the week end at the home of their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. K. Simons. Mrs. Jacobson
and Irene are staying for a. longer
visit.
Mrs. Simons Sr., and Mrs. M.
Gorgeson of Astoria, Mr. Norman
Simons and a friend of Bremer-
ton, spent a few days of last
week at the K. Simons home.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Carlson were
in Tacoma on business Saturday.
Mrs. T. Robert Sheldon of
Washington, D. C., is spending the
month of August at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Carl-
son. She flew west by plane, ar-
riving in Seattle on Friday.
On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Newmark and his two grand-
nieces, Margaret and Adelade, de-
parted for California for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Michel and
son Kenny drove to Anacortes to
visit friends over the week end.
George Hamond, in the Mer-
chant Marine, formerly of Hood
Canal, spent the week end at the
Wyres home.
Mr. Kammerer, now working on
construction of an airport at
Quiliute, was home over the week
end.
Mr. and Mrs. Leichadolsphe
had as week end visitors Mr. and
Mrs. F. Smith and Miss Nelly
Esaw of Seattle.
Miss Elizabeth Hussman re-
l
STANVAU MASON
Size 01701le
B one “use .ua, mm spousal» g
HERE ARE SKETCHES showing how to match your iars, caps and rubbers for the
canning season. The U. S. Department of Agriculture and the Washington
State Defense
Council urge home canners to "share the jars” by using re-usable
iars wherever pos-
sible, to avoid depleting stocks of new ion.
1. Jar with standard Mason sine opening (2% inches in diameter) and with
shoulder
and deep thread (~38 inch), taking screw cap or band:
A. Use a metal cap with white-lacquer
a porcelain-lined zinc cop—if you have a perfect one on hand—with a
shoulder rubber.
Zinc caps are not made now, due to war needs for zinc. B. Or use a 3-pieoe
cap-
metal screw band, glass disk, top-seal rubber. C. Or use a two-piece
cap—metal screw
band slightly less deep than style 8, and metal disk with flowsd-on rubber.
2. Jar with standard Mason size opening, without shoulder and with deep
thread
(5‘ inch) or shallow thread (% inch). Some commercial iars are this type.
For the” iar
MALLDW mam: Jen. vlleODV
B SNODLDERJ g
wsnc 3/1943
lining and a shoulder-rubber ring. Or use
type: without shoulders, use original metal-screw cap style D or one like
it. Buy new
metal disk with flowed-on rubber. Or if thread is deep, use same type of
2-piece or
3. Lightning iar with wire bail. Opening: Similar size to standard Mason
iar. U50
glass top and shoulder rubber ring.
4. size iar with screw thread. ‘Opening: 25-l6 inches in diameter. Us.
original screw cap. Buy new metal disk with flowed-on rubber, especially
made to fit
3-piece cap—shown in B and C above.
"63” iars.
Left pattern—for standard Mason size iar opening and for threads. Right
pattern—
f “63’” df th at.
turned home Wednesday after or larcpenmg an or rec s
spending the major part of the
summer in Oregon. She was ac-
l
companied by Miss Suzzanne J.
Perry of Oregon City. Miss Huss-
man and her houseguest Spentl A
Saturday sight seeing and shop-l
ping in Olympia.
Miss Betty Jo Johnson is spend-
ing the week with Miss Beverly
Dorman in Shelton.
Reports From
Belfair Area
By Everetta Z. Baldwin
Belfair, August 9—Mr. Albert
Glencross of Seattle, was a visi-
tor at the home of his daughter,.
Mrs. Garlon Crosswhite and the
Foster family last week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bering have
a new 8% lb. son. Mrs. Bering
and son returned home Monday.
Mrs. E. C. Blake, nee Anna Lou
Kieth, who has been visiting the
Misses Vera and Marguerite Zol—
otun, in Shelton, has returned
home.
Mrs. Antonio Gnarnieri of the
Dalles, Oregon, is in Belfair this
week for the wedding of her sis-
ter Estella Bulduc, whose mar-
riage to Harold Wolfe, Seaman
First Class, took place Saturday.
Mrs. Vesta Mann, who has been
confined to the Naval Hospital
in Bremerton, has returned home
and is much improved.
The resignation of Floris Nagel-
voort, district rationing officer, '
Office of Price Administration, ef- r
fective immediately, was announc— i
ed today by Clinton E. Hartson,
IOPA acting district director. A
1 successor will be appointed short-
!1y, Hartson said.
! Nagelvoort, widely known thru-
gout the state, joined the GPA in
’December 1941 and has served
continuously.
“In connection with the am;
i
inouncement of Mr. Nagelvoort‘s
gresignation, I wish to express my
gpersonal feelings of deep regret
;that this separation should have
“Mr. Nagelvoort took up rationing
,responsibilities sometime prior to
, my own connection with the office
as chief attorney. Our relations
have been of the best.
, “In behalf of the entire staff
" of the Seattle district office, I ex-
; tend to Mr. Nagelvoort our appre-
ciation of. his long, arduous and
loyal endeavors in behalf of the
lrationing programs in this state.
~His job has been one of the most
difficult in the price control and
rationing fields. He has given his
best. He is entitled to our best
The U. 5- Army has Claimedlwishes, and he has them in full
another of our Belfair boys as,measure_n
Charles Enos reported for duty
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Bremerton and have moved in.
Mrs. Lucy Foster and son Paul
visited Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell on
was formerly
and lived in Belfair years ago
when her husband owned a log-l
ging outfit here.
Paul Foster, Earl McKelvey and
Jerry Baldwin are spending this
week at Lake Sammamish where
a Sunday School camp is in pro-
gress. ‘
Don't forget the dance at Victor
Friday night.
The Girl Scouts from St. Alban-
is Camp at Lakewood, have beenI
camping once a week at the Sam
and Mary Theler home on Hood
Canal, in groups of 18 with al
counselor. In this week’s group]
there were 30 and two counselers. I
Swimming and hiking is the order ‘
of the evening.
Ben Reeves of the Army Air
Corps and a former Belfairite is
visiting friends here for a few
days. '
The marriage of Curtis (Bud)l
Wells to Darrel Saturn took placel
about three weeks ago and friends
Of the couPle surprised them sat- i one or two quarters gone seldom
[ produce much milk.
urday evening. The couple will
live at Boad’s camp.
New Coal Bunkers
For Port Orchard
Many truck loads of coal are
passing through Shelton these
days bound for Port Orchard for
the large government housing
project now nearing completion . be used more efficiently when fed
and ready for occupancy there.
The coal comes from the Great
Lakes at present and a side track
and bunkers have been construct-
ed on the N. P. line three miles
south of town where the coal is
unloaded. The trucking contractor
has six or eight trucks on the job
and expects to be kept busy for
several months getting a stock
pile and keeping the project in
fuel.
POSTPONE DANCES
Because of the taking over of
the Memorial Building by the
USO the General Welfare Club
has postponed their Saturday
meetings until further arrange-
ments can be made for new quar-
ters.
purchased a modeiyn Bhgijneha‘ifii
3become necessary,” Hartson said.
[Helps Save Feed
Vashon Island and Mrs. Mitchelll
MYS- Fred Pearson I cows that are to be culled should
With beef prices high, dairy
be sold now as they are usually
in good flesh during the pasture
season.
Following such a program will
strengthen the position of Wash-
ington dairymen as they can sell
their low-producer or “boarder”
cows while prices are high, and
keep only the animals which are
profitable producers, believes Dr.
Otto J. Hill, extension dairyman
at the State College of Washing-
ton.
At the same time the dairyman
who sells cull cows can trim his
herd down to available feed sup-
plies. ’
Milk cows that are unsatisfac-
tory producers should not be bred
as they bring better prices, ad-
vises Dr. Hill. He recommends
cows with bad udders go first, as
udders poorly attached in front
and rear are more subject to gar-
get or mastitis than sound, well
attached udders. Also udders with!
Other cows which should be
culled are the old animals be-
yond profitable production, cows
Idry and only recently settled in
calf, and beef type cows with
questionable production. I
Culling the low producing ani-l
mals will not reduce total milk
production because feed saved will
to high producers.
While every dairyman must de-
termine what cows to cull it is
well to remember some animals
produce only 4,000 pounds of milk,
while others have produced up to
herds cows producing less than
6,000 pounds of milk are culled,
while other dairymen have set
their standard as high as 10,000
pounds.
It is also well to remember one
or two “boarder” cows in a herd
may eat up the profit of 10 or 15
other animals. And it takes about
as much time to milk a cow pro-
ducing 10 pounds of milk as it
does one producing 30 to 40
pounds. When labor is scarce as it
is now, this is unprofitable work.
'few days treatment. 1
41,000 pounds in a year. In some '
Grapeview Youth
Is Promoted
Edward J. Okonek has been
promoted to Technical Sergeant,
land has been transferred from'
Camp Claiborne, La., to an un-
known destination. The neighborsi
are proud of his advance. l
Mrs. Herman Burkhardt return-
ed last week from Gridley, Calif, ,
where she has been visiting her
mother and resting after her re-l
cent appendectomy. Her brother,
Earl Matthews, returned with her'
for a short visit. ’
The Gerald Needhams have been
visiting in Portland.
Leah McGraw has visited her,
cousins and friends in Puyallup. !
We were sorry to learn that‘,
Orin Buckingham had been oblig- I
ed to return to the hospital for a
Evelyn Barrett took the oppor-
tunity to visit her grandparents
in Seattle before she begins
school, when she will be busy.
When Lt. and Mrs. Welch were
visiting here recently the com-
munity was much interested in!
the little Crosley car he drove.i
The Al Okoneks joined them for}
a picnic at the Wesserling farm.
Mrs. Will Spooner writes that]
she is enjoying her visit with rela-
tives in Vancouver, B. C.
Mrs. Oscar Sund and John drove
to Olympia on Saturday to get re-
pairs for some of the farm ma-
chinery. ’
Mrs. Welch writes from Port-
land that she has had word from
Reino Ross that he is safe in'
Australia. He had been in North
Africa last spring and sent some
interesting souvenirs from there
to his sister, Mrs. Al Okonek and,
her family. ;
Bert Mitchell spent the week
end at Lopez, in the San Juan
Islands, where he had a number
of speaking engagements. :
Some people are lucky—or have
the “know-how.” Al Okonek and
Carl Deggerller were able to land
a large salmon apiece from the
bay on Sunday.
Policewomen’s
Job Openings
A nation-wide examination to
select Policewomen for the Wash-
ington, D. 0., Police Department
was announced today by the Un-
ited States Civil Service Commis—
Sion.
Young women between the ages
of 25 and 35 who are in good
health are sought. They do not
need to have had previous exper-
ience or specific education, but a
knowledge of social case work and
an aptitude for police duties is
necessary to do well on the test.
Applications must be filed with
the United States Civil Service
Commission, Washington 25, D.
C., by August 31.
Entrance salary is $2,200 a year
and opportunities for promotion
are good. . i
Information and application
forms may be obtained from the
Commission's Local Secretary, Mr. ,-
Hale at Shelton, or from the Un-
ited States Civil Service Commis-;
sion, Washington 25, D. C.
Reminders On Change i
Of Address Notices ' !
Persons sending in changes of
address for their Journal should
be sure to use the same name as
is printed on their paper. The
circulation manager is unable to
tell if Jesse E. Doe is the same
subscriber as Mrs. E. William
Doc. 1'
Also persons are requested to
send in their old address as Well
as the new one so that their names
may be found in the files.
S’HELTON—MASON §OUNTY OURNAL
.._.._._.___ _,____
Fall and ’Winler
We feel we have bought enough
Coats so as to satisfy every
lady. We invite you to come in
and inspect our stock. We have
new shipments coming in every
Tailored
BOX COATS
Tan 41007,, Virgin
Wool
$39.7 5
Box Styles
All Wool Herringbone
TWEEDS
$34.75
All Wool
BLACK COATS
Filled and Swagger Styles.
Sizes 18 - 44.
$34.75
Containing Wool, Rayon
and Cotton,
$19.75
FALL TWEEDS
In Larger Sizes
$19.75
RAIN COATS
Sizes 4 - 20 "
5595
$6.90
iamomauamd
with 511an
Battle Wagons
When Japan attacked at Pearl Har—
bor we had 17 battleships in service
and 15 building. We were making
preparations but the war did not
wait. These 32 battle wagons cost
American taxpayers three billion
dollars for a two ocean navy. The
war seemed far away then.
Now fifty million Americans have
a personal stake in this war. It has
been brought home to them. That’s
why everyone is increasing pur-
chases of War Bonds.
U. S. Traci-wry Departure”!
AUhumeg%mm%¢a%
day.
All Wool
Chesterfields
Velveteen Collars in
Brown and Black
Fall Swagger
COATS
Thursday, August 12,1 ~‘
, /
: tloning of
and heating
at through(
'31-. Augu
d(iration
eailing prc
Northwest,
acting OP.
Fox and Wolf Collars in
Beautiful Autumn shades
of Brown, Tan and Blue.
LOCAL EGGS ............................ .. doz. 60¢
Large Special “A”
LOCAL EGGS .............................. .. doz. 55¢
Mediums
DEHYDRATED SOUP ............ .. 3 pkgs. 25¢
Chicken Noodle —,— Vegetable. 1974-02. .
TOMATO SLICES .......................... .. Jar 25¢
Libby’s Sweet, 28-oz. r
APPLE BUTTER .......................... .. par 25¢
Libby Home Style
SURE JELL ............................ .. 3 pkgs. 27¢
Pectin—Special Pack
COLA SYRUP ............................ .. bottle 27¢
Mavis, 12-oz. Makes 12 glasses ,
SPARKLING WATER __________________ _. qt. 15¢
Canada Dry—plus deposit
KOOL AID ...................................... .. pkg. 5¢
Assorted Flavors
SHORTENING ............................ .. 3-lbs. 69¢
Jewel Pure Vegetable
RYE TACK ............................... .. 2 pkgs. 35¢
Old Country Style. 12-oz. pkg.
WAX PAPER .................... 500 sheets 79¢
Sandwich Style
STALEYS STARCH .............. .. 3 pkgs. 25¢
Corn or Gloss—lb. pkgs.
CIGARETTES
Kools, Camels, Luckies ............ .. 2pkgs. 33¢
Carton $1.60
Sensation, Avalon, etc. ............ .. 2 pkgs. 27¢
Carton $1.30
PRODUCE
Our modern refrigeration plant guaran-
tees you that your fruit and vegetables
TRMATOES . . . . . . . 3-lbs. 29
CELERY lb.10¢
POTATOES 10-lbs. 45¢
U. S. No. 1, White Rose
POTATOES 50-lbs. 93¢
U. S. No. 2
GREEN BEANS . . . . 2-lbs. 19¢
ORANGES . . . . ‘8-lbs. 79¢
Sunkist
LEMONS.............lb.1l¢
Sunkist
WATERMELON lb. 5¢
Black seeded, ripe, iced if you wish
tas
We are Pleased to Announce : -e
1.. M.
COFFEE,
Is Back Again!!
Same High Quality . . . Same
popular price . . . ground to
suit your particular need.
lb.
NOT
Scotch Cleanser
2 pkgs. .......... -. 19¢
Sweetheart Soap
4 bars .......... .. 23¢
BORAXO
12-02.
2 pkgs. .......... .. 33¢
\LESLIE’S SALT
2 tubes .......... .- 19¢
LEADWAY
SOAP POWDER
24-oz. ~
2 pkgs. .......... .. 45¢
LU BEM EN ‘ EREFITILE I [a
r .3prt14411n1m
day. Thac'
’* Stove Ra
’ 111:8 just
. eetin i
Islit Auger
~ ,, Allen is
Rationin
‘ of Prici
I, author-it;
i as set
e and to
.i in dei
en 3 t
at
i rationir
l.. d heaters,
leates,
tat‘ng plan‘
etal air
To CON'
1: Iiawding
. :d in Sat
ing tht
l o; the Interi
America
2-lbs.
56c
RATIONED
snow
n.1ALE‘
l,
SUGAR
Stamp No. 13 good througl1 , Utah Train
August 15th. Nos. 15 and r ‘12.,
16, for Canning, anyt1r1ng- ,‘
. _ (‘
No. 14 valld on August tof Mr. a
1, I‘lgead h.
BLUE STAMPS % CWes
R, S and T good throngI1 ‘ thi c
September 20. “gorigsorgg:
arces Te
RED STAMPS “gig,- Th3
T, U, V good through Aug‘ , i e“ 11,136,111?
ust 31. ’ , "lai-
, ‘1 ch, 12114
minachine
COFFEE r eggs;
it
NOT RATIONED thircxgwls.
y. ’ P-